Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/5456
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Type: Journal article
Title: Ultrastructure and motility of spermatozoa in the male reproductive tract of perameloid marsupials
Author: Taggart, D.
Leigh, C.
Breed, W.
Citation: Reproduction Fertility and Development, 1995; 7(5):1141-1156
Publisher: CSIRO
Issue Date: 1995
ISSN: 1031-3613
1448-5990
Abstract: The number, distribution, maturation, motility and ultrastructure of spermatozoa from both northern (Isoodon macrourus) and southern (Isoodon obesulus) brown bandicoots were examined. One epididymidis per animal was fixed for light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy, and the contralateral side was used for the determination of sperm number, distribution and motility. Sperm form was similar between the two species. Approximately 56 x 10(6) testicular sperm and 100 x 10(6) epididymal sperm per side were present in I. macrourus, about 60% of which were in the caudal region. Initiation of sperm nuclear rotation and loss of the cytoplasmic droplet was first observed in distal caput or proximal corpus segments along with slow progressive motility. In these sperm, dislocation and anterior movement of the sperm neck from the implantation fossa and the modification of the distal margins of the sperm acrosome were evident. Motility of cauda epididymidal spermatozoa was rapid and coordinated, movement was restricted to one plane, and lateral head displacement was marked. As media viscosity increased, sperm velocity decreased, as did the amplitude of the tail beat, its frequency, and lateral head displacement but, in viscous mineral oil and mixtures of media and prostatic exudate, extremely rapid sinusoidal motility occurred. This study has detailed unusual morphological changes in bandicoot sperm during epididymal maturation and has shown that, although bandicoot sperm differ morphologically from those of the dasyurids, particularly in relation to head-tail orientation and tail ultrastructure, they exhibit similar motility.
Keywords: Prostate
Testis
Epididymis
Spermatozoa
Acrosome
Sperm Tail
Animals
Marsupialia
Mineral Oil
Microscopy, Electron
Organ Size
Sperm Count
Sperm Motility
Sperm Transport
Viscosity
Male
DOI: 10.1071/RD9951141
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rd9951141
Appears in Collections:Anatomical Sciences publications
Aurora harvest
Environment Institute publications

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